Francesca Lessa is a lecturer in Latin American studies and development at the University of Oxford. She is the author of Memory and Transitional Justice in Argentina and Uruguay and the honorary president of the Observatorio Luz Ibarburu (Uruguay). The Condor Trials received the 2023 Juan E. Méndez Book Award for Human Rights in Latin America.
[A] vital two-part study. . . . [Lessa's] painstaking work on Plan Condor and Latin America's state criminality is both admirable and important. -Miranda France, Times Literary Supplement Accessible despite its legal components, the book sheds light on the struggle for justice and human rights in South America. As our reviewer rightly praises, Lessa usefully anchors the book in its Latin American context, and away from historiographic preoccupations with the US role. -Mariana Vieira, International Affairs Blog Honorable Mention received for the Bryce Wood Book Award, sponsored by the Latin American Studies Association Winner of the 2023 Juan E. Mendez Book Award for Human Rights in Latin America, sponsored by the Duke Human Rights Center at the Franklin Humanities Institute Lessa's exploration of transnational repression in 1970s South America could not be more current in these days of resurgent authoritarianism. Her analysis of the Condor period is groundbreaking and documents both the human rights crimes and the efforts of international 'justice seekers' to breach-eventually-the dictatorships's impunity. -John Dinges, author of Hunting Enemies Abroad There is no other book that combines a decade of research on Operation Condor and transnational repression by the South American military regimes with synthesis of the literature on efforts to achieve accountability for human rights violations and analysis of the prosecutions in Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, and Italy. -Brian Loveman, San Diego State University This gripping account of Operation Condor breaks important new ground in our understanding of complex justice processes for grave human rights violations. Lessa's analysis of 'justice seekers' highlights the central role of victims in transitional and transnational justice processes. Most importantly, she centers the deeply moving stories of the victims of Operation Condor, whose lives were forever altered by transnational state terror. -Jo-Marie Burt, George Mason University